F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Attempting to upgrade your PC from 86x to 64x

Attempting to upgrade your PC from 86x to 64x

Attempting to upgrade your PC from 86x to 64x

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shanas1
Member
105
05-29-2016, 11:12 AM
#1
I upgraded my Dell OptiPlex 3040 with 16GB RAM and a new SSD, and it performed exceptionally well. However, I wondered if upgrading the system to 64-bit would be feasible using Windows Media Creator. Given that your PC is based on an Intel 86x processor with an i5 core, it should support 64-bit operation.
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shanas1
05-29-2016, 11:12 AM #1

I upgraded my Dell OptiPlex 3040 with 16GB RAM and a new SSD, and it performed exceptionally well. However, I wondered if upgrading the system to 64-bit would be feasible using Windows Media Creator. Given that your PC is based on an Intel 86x processor with an i5 core, it should support 64-bit operation.

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KADAVR04
Junior Member
42
05-31-2016, 11:31 PM
#2
what Gen i5?
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KADAVR04
05-31-2016, 11:31 PM #2

what Gen i5?

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Soccer6301
Junior Member
25
06-02-2016, 12:15 PM
#3
The situation is a bit confusing. x86 refers to a specific architecture, and the device determines whether it supports it. You don’t get to choose it—either it’s there or not. Typically, a PC runs on x86, while phones, tablets, and other devices usually don’t. The 64-bit version relates to the operating system you install. Since you’re reinstalling Windows for the SSD upgrade, just make sure to use the 64-bit edition. It’s straightforward once you follow that.
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Soccer6301
06-02-2016, 12:15 PM #3

The situation is a bit confusing. x86 refers to a specific architecture, and the device determines whether it supports it. You don’t get to choose it—either it’s there or not. Typically, a PC runs on x86, while phones, tablets, and other devices usually don’t. The 64-bit version relates to the operating system you install. Since you’re reinstalling Windows for the SSD upgrade, just make sure to use the 64-bit edition. It’s straightforward once you follow that.

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BoociTulip
Member
74
06-03-2016, 05:55 PM
#4
X86 is indeed a CPU design you're correct about. AMDx64, which Intel also employs today, is another architecture built around Intel's x86 foundation. I wanted to know what Gen i5 OP offers since I understand all Core series CPUs support x64. It seems the solution might be switching to a 64-bit version of Windows instead of changing the OS type. Also puzzling is why OP reports significant performance gains from adding 16GB of RAM if they're already running a 64-bit OS—this suggests their CPU is likely already 64-bit.
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BoociTulip
06-03-2016, 05:55 PM #4

X86 is indeed a CPU design you're correct about. AMDx64, which Intel also employs today, is another architecture built around Intel's x86 foundation. I wanted to know what Gen i5 OP offers since I understand all Core series CPUs support x64. It seems the solution might be switching to a 64-bit version of Windows instead of changing the OS type. Also puzzling is why OP reports significant performance gains from adding 16GB of RAM if they're already running a 64-bit OS—this suggests their CPU is likely already 64-bit.

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Quick_Pots
Member
120
06-06-2016, 03:42 AM
#5
Your system supports 64-bit Windows. Click the "This PC" icon and choose "Properties" to view details. The "System type" section indicates your installed Windows version. Upgrading from 32-bit to 64-bit requires a fresh installation, but it will work as long as you reinstall the same edition (Home or Pro).
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Quick_Pots
06-06-2016, 03:42 AM #5

Your system supports 64-bit Windows. Click the "This PC" icon and choose "Properties" to view details. The "System type" section indicates your installed Windows version. Upgrading from 32-bit to 64-bit requires a fresh installation, but it will work as long as you reinstall the same edition (Home or Pro).

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EzPzCombo
Junior Member
17
06-07-2016, 06:58 PM
#6
He added 16GB of RAM and it works properly, meaning he’s already using 64-bit. A 32-bit system can only handle up to 4GB of memory.
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EzPzCombo
06-07-2016, 06:58 PM #6

He added 16GB of RAM and it works properly, meaning he’s already using 64-bit. A 32-bit system can only handle up to 4GB of memory.

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Ruubiee17
Senior Member
572
06-07-2016, 07:25 PM
#7
More precisely, x86 refers to a 32-bit processor design. Its 64-bit version is known as x86_64. It's also referred to as AMD64 or, as Windows prefers, x64. Interestingly, the naming changed over time—before x86_64 became standard, they used x64 for backward compatibility, and now they've shifted the 'x' to the end.
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Ruubiee17
06-07-2016, 07:25 PM #7

More precisely, x86 refers to a 32-bit processor design. Its 64-bit version is known as x86_64. It's also referred to as AMD64 or, as Windows prefers, x64. Interestingly, the naming changed over time—before x86_64 became standard, they used x64 for backward compatibility, and now they've shifted the 'x' to the end.